I wrote the following post a few years ago while reflecting on a journey with my son Ben who has autism. Recently my path has taken me down a new and exciting road. After talking with several friends who all have children with autism I realized we all had the same problem, church. Children's ministry was difficult but youth ministry was next to impossible. Time after time friends have confessed to me that by the time their "special" kids reach their teenage years they resent church and beg their parents to leave them home.
I thought that might be the fate of Ben as every Wednesday night became a battle. It was so much easier to give in and let him stay home. And that is almost what I let him do. One night in the church hallway I carefully mentioned our struggle to Bekah (Ben's youth pastor) and to my utter delight she asked if we could meet for coffee. That coffee date was the beginning of something beautiful for Ben. Bekah would not let Ben settle for Wednesday nights at home. She wouldn't let the church fail Ben. For that I will be forever grateful.
Bekah and I searched for resources to guide us on this journey. We were saddened to find that there was very little direction out there for assisting autistic teens on their spiritual journey. We both believed that God's love and hope is meant for all people regardless of ability. As a result we have shared many triumphs and a few failures while helping Ben experience Christ through youth group adventures. Although its a path neither of us expected it is a place we both have come to love.
Considering our deep love of "special" teens and commitment to helping them experience Jesus it should come as no surprise that when asked if Bekah and I could share what we have learned we both jumped at the opportunity! We have developed a ministry plan to aid teens, their families and youth workers to a successful youth ministry experience. We will be leading another seminar April 8th. See the following link for more information.
http://www.youthleadership.org/3HOUR-Training.aspx
While we don't claim to have all the answers. I can tell you that Ben is thriving in church, experiencing God's grace and love. My prayer is to help all people regardless of ability experience Christ as Ben has. Together I believe we can show these teens that God loves them and has created them in His own image. We can show them they have a place in out hearts, our life and our ministry.
Read on for a little more about me and Ben......
Gifts
"I am not exactly sure what I am looking at. I am not an ultrasound
technician but it looks like there might be two heads!" my obstetrician
informed me. "I have a two headed baby?" I gasped. It never occurred to
me that at 30 weeks pregnant, I might be carrying
twins! She showed me "it looks like a head up here and then" with a
dramatic wave of her arm to the other side of my protruding abdomen she
finishes "another head all the way down here." Did she have to say "all
the way" as if the other end of my stomach was somewhere near Florida? I
was pretty sure I was still sleeping and pretty soon I would wake up.
It was after all, 2:30 in the morning.
The next morning I
discovered I indeed had been awake. I was definitely pregnant with
twins, a boy and a girl. 7 short weeks later on September 13th, Benjamin
and Mikaela were born. Despite worries of potential complications and
concerns, both babies were born perfect and healthy. Benjamin and
Mikaela were good babies, they slept and ate well. They were the most
beautiful babies I had ever seen. They were also as different as night
and day. He was round and chubby, she was petite and tiny. He was mostly
bald except for a small patch of blond hair, she had the most
beautiful, brunette ringlets. As they turned 1 their differences only
became more pronounced. She was incredibly articulate, already speaking
in full sentences. He was slower to speak, passing grunting sounds off
as words as she babbled away. People would tell me, “he is a boy and
boys develop more slowly, no worries”. I tried to put those worries
away.
As they turned two, I noticed my son was becoming harder to
handle, he would run as fast as he could without ever looking back. He
would have angry outbursts and melt down at what seemed to be such minor
things. I would express my concerns, only to hear, “he is a boy, they
are more physical, you worry too much, just let him mature”. Still in
the back of my mind I couldn’t completely turn off my worries. At 3 my
daughter sat in Sunday School class, next to the teacher offering to
help hand out papers, while my son would cry from under the table.
I
started to question my abilities. I began to worry “was I enough of a
mother to handle these two babies?” I was afraid I couldn’t do it. I
realized I needed some help.
Just as September 13th my life had
been turned upside down, again my world was rocked on October 24th when I
attended a speech evaluation meeting for Ben. I couldn’t believe it. I
walked into a room of about 7 people around a table. I sat
down and all the faces grew serious. I felt the pit in my stomach sink a
little lower. They looked at each other trying to decide who should
speak first. Finally after what seemed
like an eternity someone spoke, she said “I am very sorry to tell you
this, but your son, he has Autism.” “What ?” I was about to explode,
“you must have the wrong results; see I am here for Ben the one with the
speech issue.” They only shook their heads and said, “speech is one way
Autism shows itself, we have thoroughly tested Ben and we are sure, he
is autistic.” The rest of the meeting was a blur; they showed me bar
graphs and tests. They showed me where a “normal” child would be and
then where Ben was.
The
next several weeks I began making 2nd, 3rd and 4th opinion
appointments. I saw our pediatrician, a pediatric neurologist, a speech
pathologist, a psychiatrist, a psychologist and Child Development
Specialist. Every appointment ended the same way, “yes Ben is Autistic”
then they would give me ideas to cope and support services I could use. I
didn’t want to cope. I didn’t want to be supported. I wanted this
diagnosis to go away.
“Why would God allow Ben to be Autistic?
What is Ben’s future? What will become of him?” I cried. My dreams and
hopes were crashing in on me. It wasn’t that I wanted a perfect child,
or even that I thought it somehow reflected me. It was that I loved this
little boy with my life and when he watched other kids do things he
couldn’t or when other little boys played together on the playground and
Ben was left all alone, my heart broke for him. It broke into millions
of tiny little pieces. I
knew for the rest of his life, he was going to be different. But, it
wasn’t even so much what I did know that scared me, but what I didn’t
know that terrified me, kept me awake at night. No one could tell me
what the future was for Ben. Would he be able to go to a normal school?
Would he be able to make friends? Would he be able to drive? Would he be
able to have a girlfriend? What about live alone? What if I were to
die? What would become of Ben? I was left with many questions and so few
answers.
To answer some of these questions I drug Ben to yet
another specialist. Each appointment I hoped for a new diagnosis, a
confirmation of a mistake. This day was different. It would be a
beginning of a new life, for both me and Ben. I walked in, unaware of
what God had planned for me. I marched up to the counter to check Ben
in. Once checked in I plopped myself down on the uncomfortable hard
backed chair, and settled in for what would likely be an incredibly long
wait. As I sat I pulled out my list of questions to be sure it was
complete and that I hadn’t thought of anymore. I caught something out of
the corner of my eye. It was a mother, holding a small child. I noticed
behind her was a wheelchair. It looked to me that this child likely
could not move un-assisted. The girl’s eyes were glossy I am guessing she must have been blind. She was not talking, yet her mother was still
talking to her. The mother had the little girl cradled like a newborn,
although it was obvious that she was not a newborn at all. It didn’t
seem to matter to her. It was easy to see that when this mother
looked at her daughter she did not see her disabilities but her
abilities. She didn’t see what her child would never do but saw the
potential of what she might do. This mother didn’t miss a moment, she
didn’t miss a grin or a giggle. She looked at her daughter as a gift and
her daughter was flourishing because of it.
In that moment I heard a soft whisper from God. "Lisa until you see the gift I have given to you in Ben you will never be the mom he so desperately needs you be."
Then it hit me, what was I
missing? God had given me a gift, but could I see it? Had I missed the
sparkle in his eyes, the hugs from his arms, the tears on his cheeks?
Just then, I grabbed a hold of my son, I took him in my arms, just like
he were a newborn and right there in that clinic I held him and wept, I
wept over what I had lost and then over what I had gained. A gift.
The
questions that whirled in my mind just seconds before had vanished. The
tests, the procedures, the questionnaires, the results, none of it
mattered now. What mattered was this little boy named Ben. Not the boy
with autism, or the disabled boy, no just simply Ben.
Ben has taught
me about life. Ben has taught me how to enjoy the moment. He has taught
me how to love instead of judge. Ben has taught me not to be embarrassed
of my weaknesses. He has shown me I am capable of more than I ever
thought possible. Ben has been a reminder of the gift of life.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Christmas Angels... don't you love em?
What
was your favorite Christmas memory? The question has been posed to me. There was the year
of the Barbie dream house. It even had
an elevator. Then there was the year of the guinea pig, yup you guessed it
somehow little Squeakers survived the flight on the sleigh and found a place
under my tree. Memories of the kids first Christmas’ and watching them open
gifts they have hoped would be in the pretty packaging. However, ironically my
favorite Christmas happened during my worst year. 2001. I was recently divorced
and even more recently informed my son was autistic.
Only a
month before Christmas I was at the edge of homelessness and God showed up. (Insert
Thanksgiving story, if you haven’t heard it you will have to wait for
Thanksgiving) Since He had performed a Thanksgiving miracle I knew that God would
take care of us but just wasn’t sure what that would look like and how it would
happen.
The month
of December began with my friends (church and work) asking if they could help
my family out with some Christmas gifts. A week later a parent of my long time
best friend asked if she could take me shopping to pick out clothes for the
kids and some gifts. I came home with bags of gifts and a Cub gift care that
would provide food for at least the month of December! A
couple of days before Christmas gifts were delivered by some angels (disguised
as my friends) and when they said “some” they were LYING! Truckloads of gifts
were delivered. Some other friends invited me to a traditional Christmas family
celebration at their parent’s home, there my children were guests of honor,
loved on, given gifts and I was even forced to try Lutefisk. YUCK! :) In their home I
was family. Christmas morning we opened gifts for what seemed like hours. The
kids had more gifts that year than every birthday and Christmas they have ever
had combined. They still reference it as the Christmaspalooza.
In the
worst of times yet it was the best of times. After Thanksgiving God promised me
that if I gave Him the reins He would not let me down. Through these most
amazing people God was able to tell me this.
Lisa I
love you. I love Mikaela, I love Ben, I love Faith. I love you so much. I know
sometimes you feel so lonely. I also know that you trust me but sometimes you
need a little reinforcement. I know all your needs so I have sent you all these
amazing people, people who love me and love you. Stop for a minute, take it in,
look around and see what I have done. I love you.
Christmas
happened so that we would have Jesus, (God with us) thanks to that Christmas
2001 I am reminded that God is always with me, wherever I am and wherever I go.
No guinea pig could ever beat that! I pray God is able to remind you of the same this Christmas!
Merry Christmas from my family to yours!
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Pleasing People
“He is really such a people pleaser.” It was about the 12th time my son’s teacher said this in the morning IEP meeting. The first 6 times she said it I was thinking it was a good thing, it was followed up with “He is so cooperative” and “Ben is so flexible” but the tone began to change and it appeared that the group didn’t think Ben’s people pleasing was such a gift after all. You know that moment in time when you suddenly see something in your child that you don’t like about yourself?
My name is Lisa and I am an admitted People Pleaser. I have
read self-help books on the subject, I met with therapists regarding the issue,
requested wise counsel on the matter but honestly 36 years later I haven’t
changed much. I like people to be happy and I like it even more when they are
happy with me.
All day long it bothered me. How did I unleash this terrible
habit on my son? Will he ever learn to stand up for himself? Will he be beaten
down and never find satisfaction? After all who can ever please everybody? I
worried, I prayed that my deficient mother skills hadn’t brought too much harm
to him or at the very least it might be reversible.
When Ben finally returned home I sat him down. I explained to
him how important it was that he realized it wasn’t his job to make everyone
happy not only that but his self-esteem shouldn’t depend on what others think
of him, only what God thought of him. At that point I think he might have
thought I lost my mind because he gave me an exasperated “MOM what in the world
are you talking about?” I told him about the meeting and my fears for him. Then
he said “Well mom, I don’t care. I truly don’t care. I mean I am just happy to
be there. So I figure hey, if they care about something more than I do, why not
let them have their way? (long pause/sigh) Mom is that wrong?”
I had to think for a while, honestly too long because by the
time I had an answer it was too late, he was gone. I am pretty sure he wasn’t
really asking me a question. And that is how it is with Ben, more often than
not he is the one teaching me the life lesson rather than the other way around.
People pleasing is not always
bad. In fact it can be quite good. If
you care deeply for someone, you are sincerely grateful (as Ben is to be at a
truly amazing school) or you believe in the golden rule, why not go out of your
way to please someone else? Lesson learned. I probably should have consulted Ben before
therapy, think of the money I could have saved!
Saturday, November 24, 2012
What a Day!
Christmas in August, that is the last time I bogged. Ha!
Guess I will never make a living blogging. lol In August Black Friday,
preparation for Christmas seemed so far away. It reminds me how fast time really
goes. Upside Down Black Friday occurred
yesterday and it really was a wonderful day. My kids weren’t thrilled to hear
we were going to forgo the traditional Christmas shopping trip but after a day
of rolling and decorating cookies with their friends they got over it. Hundreds
of cookies were decorated and many loaves of bread were baked, blankets, cards
and bag lunches were assembled and lots of wonderful surprises were
delivered. When I planned the event I
was excited about making cookies, blessing others and putting a smile on God’s
face. But honestly I wasn’t prepared for the overwhelming emotion I had when I
stopped and looked around the room for a moment. I am always trying to determine
what is it that God is trying to teach me. I thought yesterday might have been a
lesson of sacrifice, giving and serving. Instead, I believe what God was
showing me is how richly blessed I am. I was not sacrificing ANYTHING! I looked around the room and saw my
children engaging in serving with amazing people I have come to know and love.
My husband (who out of his love for me) rescued me with a couple trips to the store for items we needed. My
mother and mother-in-law worked all day cooking, cleaning, pretty much doing
anything I asked to help make the day happen. People ran to get items that I
didn’t think of, things that would add to the day. All around the room, older
people were helping the younger ones and younger people were helping older ones.
Strangers and families all gathered for a greater cause. God allowed me to see a glimpse of the MANY, MANY ways He has shown me love through the people around me. I am humbled and deeply blessed. I am supported by a church that believes in its family and encourages them to
live out the things God has placed on their heart. Then at the end of the day
standing in the shelter I watched a young girl have more compassion in her
little finger then the rest of us together, love on and encourage those in the
shelter. When most of us grown adults were dealing with our discomfort and
awkwardness this young lady stepped out boldly and was Jesus to the broken.
Wow, I am so blessed. I am surrounded by cheerleaders and encouragers, servers
and givers. God has blessed me richly and I am so grateful.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Christmas in August?
I know it’s a little soon to think about Christmas in August
but hey they had school supplies out before school even ended. You know it won’t be long and the red and
green tinsel will be donning the shelves of Target.
I have to admit Christmas as a kid was the most exciting day of the year but honestly as an adult I start to feel anxiety at the mere mention of the word. Instead of sugarplums dancing in my head I have Discover card bills and arguments with my husband (usually in the middle of the Target electronics aisle). I would like to blame Target ads and Walmart schemes for this festive heartburn however I think it is time to put my big girl panties on and face my own music. I am an adult. I have choices.
About now you are thinking “whoah Lisa, its August, chill out.” You see it all started when I was researching women’s Bible studies. I needed a 4 week study for November/December and that is when I came across a study called The Advent Conspiracy. The premise of the study is basically taking back Christmas. It is based on the following principles “Worship fully, spend less, (money on plastic junk) give more (of your presence) and love all.” It is for those who tired of commercialism and materialism. (and Discover card bills and fights in Target) The movement suggests giving some of the money you save for something that will make an eternal difference. Their organization of choice is Living Water International (since just a fraction of what Americans spend in one Christmas could provide clean water to the entire world) but they encourage you to find your own movement or organization to benefit.
For more information check it out….
I have to admit Christmas as a kid was the most exciting day of the year but honestly as an adult I start to feel anxiety at the mere mention of the word. Instead of sugarplums dancing in my head I have Discover card bills and arguments with my husband (usually in the middle of the Target electronics aisle). I would like to blame Target ads and Walmart schemes for this festive heartburn however I think it is time to put my big girl panties on and face my own music. I am an adult. I have choices.
About now you are thinking “whoah Lisa, its August, chill out.” You see it all started when I was researching women’s Bible studies. I needed a 4 week study for November/December and that is when I came across a study called The Advent Conspiracy. The premise of the study is basically taking back Christmas. It is based on the following principles “Worship fully, spend less, (money on plastic junk) give more (of your presence) and love all.” It is for those who tired of commercialism and materialism. (and Discover card bills and fights in Target) The movement suggests giving some of the money you save for something that will make an eternal difference. Their organization of choice is Living Water International (since just a fraction of what Americans spend in one Christmas could provide clean water to the entire world) but they encourage you to find your own movement or organization to benefit.
For more information check it out….
So now I have a choice to make. I can think about, heck even do the study and talk about how I need to make a change but just continue the pattern or I can DECIDE to make a change. Make it public and do something. It has to be intentional and planned or Black Friday ads will arrive and I will forget my whole August pledge. I am going to begin my plan of attack now, today to bring CHRISTmas back. (at least to my little piece of the world)
I am still working on what this will look like (any and all ideas/guidance/wisdom would be appreciated) but I am starting with this…… Black Friday or what I would like to call Walmartmas. Instead of sleeping at Best Buy or praying for the Old Navy golden ticket I am going to begin the first phase of attack.
Phase 1-On Black Friday I am officially inviting you, yes
you to my home where I will serve you breakfast. We will then spend the
morning/afternoon making Christmas cookies/breads/whatever yummy we can think
of. We will then deliver them to the different shut ins/widows/homeless/whoever
God crosses our paths with. Children are encouraged and invited to attend. More
details will follow. J
I have read the complaints about Target ads wishing Happy
Holidays instead of Merry Christmas but since when is it Target’s job to spread
the Good News? Is that what we as Christians have reduced ourselves to? It is
our story, we need to tell it. Better yet, how about we live it?
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